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'The Boondocks' Creator Aaron McGruder Tells Us About 'The Uncle Ruckus Movie'

I chatted with the creator of 'The Boondocks' about black self-hatred, post-Obama race relations, and why Herman Cain is the real-life Uncle Ruckus.

It's always scary when Hollywood tries to bring your favorite comic and cartoon characters to life in live-action films. For every success story like Sin City, there are innumerable steaming piles of shit like Aeon Flux. So when I heard there were plans to pull Uncle Ruckus from the pages of The Boondocks and put him on the big screen in a live-action R-rated comedy, I had a lot of questions. Uncle Ruckus isn't just any ordinary fictional character, and The Boondocks isn't your average comic strip and animated series. The Boondocks, now in the middle of producing its fourth season for Cartoon Network's Adult Swim, is one of the few programs on television that uses scathing satire to make you laugh and think critically about racial issues, politics, and modern life in America. And Uncle Ruckus—the white-people worshipping one-eyed right-wing nut job whose name has superseded "Uncle Tom" as the preferred pejorative for black sell outs—is probably the show's most compelling and painfully hilarious character. When I first heard about the proposition of The Uncle Ruckus Movie, the last thing I wanted was for Hollywood to swoop in and make a quick buck by cashing in on the laughs Ruckus's racist barbs garner, without delivering the more thought-provoking messages on race relations that we get in The Boondocks comic and show.